Keyword Density Checker

Keyword Density Checker

What does keyword density mean for SEO?

When it comes to ranking pages for a certain keyword, keyword density isn't a big deal for search engines today. Use your focus keyword(s) in all of the important on-page elements, like the title tag, meta description, H1, body, alt tag, and internal links, so that search engines can understand what your page is about. Search engines still put a lot of weight on off-page factors like backlinks and anchor text when they index and rank your webpages, even though they are not on the page itself.

What is the best way to use keywords?

The best keyword density is like the best length of content: it's a question that a lot of people ask, but no one has a good answer for. This question is hard to answer because it depends on what you are writing about. Some topics are great for long content forms with a lot of related keywords and synonyms. On the other hand, there are topics that work best with short pieces of content that use the same keywords more than once. The best advice on this subject is to write in a way that makes sense to people, not to algorithms and crawlers on computers.

What is keyword density?

Keyword density is the percentage you get when you divide the number of times a keyword appears in a page's text by the total number of words. Keyword density and frequency are still pretty good ways to figure out which keywords and keyword phrases are the most important for a page.

How many keywords should you use to get the best search results?

Did you know that the number of times a keyword appears on a page compared to the total number of words on that page can affect the page's ranking?

Yes, it does, and the term for it is "keyword density."

If you use a keyword or phrase too many times on your site, search engines may not like it. If you do it just a little less than you need to, search engines might not get enough information to rank the page for that keyword.

To put it simply, you should use the right amount of keywords for the best search results. Not too little, not too much!

But how do you figure out how many times a keyword shows up on a website or blog post? Can you even get it right?

It looks like you'll need help from a good tool. Because of this, we created the SST's Keyword Density Checker.

How to deal with too many keywords

If keyword density is less than 3 percent, there's nothing to worry about. If it's more than that, it's called "keyword stuffing." The first trick is to use different words for the same thing. For example, you can replace "plagiarism checker" with "plagiarism detector," "plagiarism software," or "copy and paste checker." For this, you can use the free Prepostseo article rewriter tool, which will automatically look for words that are similar to the ones in the article. With the second trick, "make the text longer," this percentage will automatically go down.